Fifteen-year-old Esteban Marchant used to find the sight and sound of crowds unbearable, yet last February he walked onto the stage of the Davis Musical Theatre, before an audience of more than 200 people, with an easy smile on his face, took his place under the lights, listened for his music cue, and began to sing.
He performed Elton John’s “Your Song,” swaying to the melody and smiling, beaming as he finished crooning that last line—how wonderful life is when you’re in the world. The crowd responded with applause that quickly swelled into a standing ovation. “I loved it,” Esteban says of the experience. Esteban’s achievement on stage that night would make any parent proud, but because Esteban has autism and did not speak for many years, it was an especially meaningful moment for his mom and dad. (To see a clip of Esteban's '07 performance of the same song on YouTube, click here.)
David Villasenor, Esteban’s dad, still remembers his son’s first sentence: I want outside. “It was like a metaphor,” David says, “like he wanted to go outside of his autism and start talking.” Now Esteban is helping other kids “go outside” of their autism. His solo performance in February was part of a community fundraising event for SENSE Theatre, a unique research program designed to help children with autism communicate better, stress less in social situations, and gain confidence.
... “It really doesn’t feel like therapy,” says SENSE Theatre co-founder and parent advocate, Christine Totah, “it feels like a lot of fun!” That fun factor is a key part of the program.
SENSE Theatre’s other founder, Blythe Corbett, Ph.D. and assistant professor of Psychiatry at UC Davis, is a pediatric neuropsychologist with a background in professional acting and writing. She researches autism at UC Davis’ MIND Institute (Medical Investigation of Neurological Disorders) with Joan Gunther, Psy.D., who has dedicated fifteen years to working with children with autism. (SENSE stands for Social-Emotional NeuroScience Endocrinology.)
SENSE Theatre debuts its first full production, Disney’s The Jungle Book Kids, in June at the Davis Musical Theater Company. Corbett and Gunther supervise the children’s progress while Jeni Price, who has a background in developmental psychology and early childhood special education, directs the show. The cast is currently comprised of thirty-five children (ages 7-16), eight of whom have autism.
...“Theater is so nice because it is practiced interactions,” says Gunther. “Children with autism are very comfortable with a routine and structure, so when something is scripted… it takes the fear away. They know what is coming… and what they can expect.” Over time, a child may come to understand why he is making a certain expression in a particular context. He may even learn how to use that expression appropriately offstage.
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Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Theater as Therapy
Sacramento Parent Magazine ran this article about the SENSE program last month:
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